Fujiko Nakaya is a Japanese artist (born in 1933), whose "fog sculptures" represent the culmination of her life long collaborations with nature. The installation on Pero's Bridge in Bristol highlights the ever-increasing effects of climate change, making the unflinching observation that our world is getting warmer.

It asks "What are we going to do about it?" and "How will this affect our lives?"

Nakaya's work is exactly the opposite in form - but raises the same point. With the introduction of fog and obscurity into the city-centre, will it force people to think, and see more clearly the damage we are all causing to our natural environment?

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Fog Bridge Bristol is a brilliant example of art getting people involved; talking, laughing, joking, running in and out of the clouds, but most importantly, thinking too. In a way, the ubiquitous epithets describing modern art - "contemporary installations/interventions", "site-specific occurrences", "art outside of the gallery" seems to do this work a disservice.

For it is so much more than that.

It fights against the passive, inaccessible experiences so often associated with these phrases. Fog Bridge is an active and all-encompassing event which makes you look a-new at the world, your immediate surroundings, nature - and your own place within it. The best thing about it, is that you don't even have to know it's 'art' to be thoroughly engrossed.

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The foggy walkway forms a playground for adults (and of course children too), running in and out of the intense mist. And for me, this element of 'play' is what ensures the success of Nakaya's artwork. Play is a crucial element in children's development, and shouldn't be underestimated in the adult sphere either.

It is an active process of questioning, manipulating and understanding events around us - and as Jean Piaget (the Swiss developmental psychologist and philosopher) identified: "Play is the answer to the question: How does anything new ever come about?"

Image: Blogger's Own

Nakaya's art teaches adults (in the same way as her own collaborations with nature), to play with their own environment; to respect it, question it - and most importantly to effect new changes. The theme of this year's festival is 'Storm', and as part of the event, the organisers ask, what do you want to change, what would your personal 'storm' be? Nakaya has given her answer. What is yours?